changing ownership

Blackburn, Marvin Marvin.Blackburn at glenraven.com
Mon Dec 20 14:38:29 UTC 2004


In Redhat, this is not the case.
You cannot change the ownership to someone else. 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: redhat-list-bounces at redhat.com 
> [mailto:redhat-list-bounces at redhat.com] On Behalf Of Rino Mardo
> Sent: Monday, December 20, 2004 9:23 AM
> To: General Red Hat Linux discussion list
> Subject: Re: changing ownership
> 
> if he **is** the owner of the files then he can do whatever 
> he wants with it.
> 
> man chown.
> 
> 
> On Mon, 20 Dec 2004 09:21:37 -0500, Blackburn, Marvin
> <Marvin.Blackburn at glenraven.com> wrote:
> > I have the need to have a non-priveleged user change the 
> ownership of a
> > file or files that he owns, to
> > another non-privelged user.
> > 
> > Redhat does not permit this. We thought about using sudo, 
> however this
> > could be dangerous.
> > Is there a secure way to do this.
> > If we use sudo, is there a way to make sure that the 
> options provided to
> > the chown commands or
> > wrapper script are safe?
> > 
> > ------------------
> > Marvin Blackburn
> > Systems Administrator
> > Glen Raven
> > "He's no failure.  He's not dead yet" --William Lloyd George
> > 
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> 
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